Corporal punishment and the pain provoked by the community of enquiry pedagogy in the university classroom
Corporal punishment and the pain provoked by the community of enquiry pedagogy in the university classroom
Education for transformation and social justice calls for critical, reflective, imaginative and independent thinkers with enquiring minds and a strong sense of curiosity - the ends and means of what Jonathan Jansen calls a 'pedagogy to disrupt' and Gert Biesta a 'pedagogy of interruption'. For this reason, I introduced an innovative pedagogy in some of my courses at the School of Education, University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg - the internationally established 'community of enquiry' pedagogy. I report on how in an Ethics course the pedagogy opened up a space for undergraduate students to disclose their own experiences of corporal punishment in the schools where they were placed for teaching practice. The pedagogy made room for a critical incident to emerge that was painful for both tutors and students, but, as I argue, crucial for participation, inclusion and the demands of open-mindedness, critical thinking and also solidarity required in a deliberative democracy.
CITATION: Murris, Karin. Corporal punishment and the pain provoked by the community of enquiry pedagogy in the university classroom . : Taylor & Francis , 2014. Africa Education Review, Vol. 11, Issue No. 2, 2014, pp. 219-235 - Available at: https://library.au.int/corporal-punishment-and-pain-provoked-community-enquiry-pedagogy-university-classroom